Pieter Claesz

Berchem 1596 - Haarlem 1660


Tobacco Still-Life with Herring and a Bread Roll.

Oil on Panel, 31 x 41.5 cm
Monogrammed and dated lower right: PC 1657

ENQUIRIES

Provenance

Since ca. 1830 in a private swiss collection;
Sale Koller, Zürich, 13 June 1986;
Private Collection, Germany;
London, Maastricht, Noortman Gallery, 1987;
Private Collection.

Literature

Weltkunst, 56. Jg., Mai 1986;
M. Brunner-Bulst, Pieter Claesz., Kritischer Oeuvrekatalog, Lingen 2004, cat. no. 231 p.342, reproduced in colour p.119 and 117 (detail).




Additionnal Information

Pieter Claesz was born in Berchem around 1597. There is little factual information known about his early years or his artistic training. In 1620 Pieter Claesz is first mentioned in the Antwerp Guild of St Luke where he is registered as a master painter. About a year later Claesz and his wife moved to the prosperous city of Haarlem, where in 1622 their son Nicolaes Berchem was born. It appears he spent the rest of his life in Haarlem where he died in 1661. 

 

Generally, Pieter Claesz was regarded as one of the most accomplished still-life painters of the first half of Dutch seventeenth century painting. Pieter Claesz was one of the principal painters of monochrome still lifes and in particular one of the most important exponents of the so-called School of the Monochrome Banketje, which flourished in Haarlem. 

 

The present work painted during one of the last years of Claesz’s life displays great verve. Painted in 1657 this work attests to his undiminished powers of invention. Works he painted during the last few years of his life were typical, yet not repetitive, and remained infused with compositional confidence and painterly expression. In never ending inventive ways he combined objects in constantly new variants. This work bears witness to an inner strength that always succeeded in uniting the old, familiar motifs into a logical visual form. 

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